释义 |
‖ dyscrasia|dɪˈskreɪsɪə| Also 7 dis-. [med.L., a. Gr. δυσκρασία bad temperament (of body, air, etc.), f. δυσ- (dys-) + κρᾶσις mixing, tempering.] = dyscrasy.
c1400Lanfranc's Cirurg. 54 A Wounde þat haþ enpostym or an yuel discrasiam—þat is to seie out of kynde distemperid, eiþer to cold eiþer to hoot. 1677Gilpin Demonol. (1867) 65 The souls of men have their general discrasias and disaffections, as our bodies have. 1859Todd Cycl. Anat. V. 413/1 We find these alterations associated with a general dyscrasia. Hence dysˈcrasial a., of the nature of, belonging to, or arising from dyscrasia.
1874Van Buren Dis. Genit. Org. 23 Acute dyscrasial disease—typhus, small-pox, etc. |